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Ideas Taking Turns

Today is the last day of an even year. I really like even years and this one has been epic like many others. I got a niece, news of an Osborne nephew in May, and another Sustad cousin in June! Expanding family plus celebrating my 10 year anniversary, a Royal’s post season, and moments of magic with my kids?! A year of grandeur indeed.

While there is much to look forward to in 2015, I’m having a hard day letting go…moving on.

I’ve been thinking of ways to shape the new year, rhythms to establish, ways to be, postures to hold, and errors to erase. 

Nothing is set in stone and the hours wane.

On the way to drop Andi off to a playdate today, we talked about what good friends do and say. Taking turns on who gets to choose what to do has been a playdate conundrum this break so I said, “Take turns with your ideas today, if she has an idea of what she wants to do…” and Andi interjected, “We’ll do her idea first and then my idea…”

Take turns with my ideas…make space for the ideas of others. That could be a practice I practice this new year…

And also, what I’ve mused about today…

Lindsey Osborne 2015: MIND and MOUTH. 

MIND: I want to be fully present mentally in one place at a time. I need this on phone calls and with my children most of all.

MOUTH: Yes, putting in clean and health-full food in my mouth, but mostly I mean, saying fewer negative things. I want to speak to encourage, cheer, and bless…and also to say, LESS! Keeping my mouth shut more often than in 2014- that’s a thing I will work towards.

To set them forth in writing intimidates, but grace abounds, filling up the weak me and offering new starts after failed days. Mercies are new every morning and every day is a gift. I have a great life and I want to live it as a gift I receive and can give this next year.

Here’s to looking back and hoping forward.

Happy New Year.

*There are 12 letters in “Happy New Year” so Andi and I made a month-themed sign for our party that starts now! Look close if you can!

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A Chronicle of Christmas 2014

.Today I write on a Saturday. Behind me are kids playing with friends and new toys. I’ve been to see a movie…10:10am Wild with Laura and now James and Drew are at a movie themselves. It feels like the second Saturday in 5 days. Christmas on a Thursday has given us a wonderfully long space of family togetherness and a peaceful pace.

This is a Missouri/home Christmas with kids aged 8, 6, and 2 in their primes of present calculation and Advent engagement (Eli), Christmas music DJ and dancer (Andi), and Christmas talking, “Baby Jesus”, “angel” “Santa” and “Lights! Mom look, Lights!”(Oaks). We had great moments at home, church, and with others and now attempt to put a few memories down on “paper” here.

This was a Christmas of….

  • Hosting in our new Home. First Christmas in our new house allowed us to host some great evenings. We had 15 kids for a YL Christmas caroling and white elephant exchange night, then our annual ladies Christmas Being party, and a wonderful night with our family friends the Graves, all around one big dining room table.IMG_3960
  • An Emphasis on Incarnation. I got to speak at the Gashland Presbyterian Christmas Tea on December 15th. God gave me the message of John 1 along with Luke 2 so I got to share that God’s family spread from heaven to earth and invites us up into the love already there for us. I couldn’t help but see the light and life in John 1 as the central theme of Christmas. Turns out, that’s what God told our church as well! The Christmas Eve service was about being found in God’s translation of Self to humanity for all who seek and want him. The dramatic reading that night was a weave of John 1, Luke 2!!!IMG_4886
  • Present anticipation! The wrapped boxes and written Christmas lists made Eli and Andi excited and curious. However, they were patient and grateful when actual opening came around. They opened with IMG_0043IMG_0045great energy, enthusiasm, and the unavoidable consideration of “Hmm…I didn’t ask for this but I will for sure give it a try.” IMG_0045IMG_0039They have enjoyed and played with their new stuff…sharing and creating, building and reading, inviting friends, trying new things, and mixing the new in with their old standbys.
  • Christmas Claustrophobia. We invited our good friends the Sollarses into our Winsteads and Plaza light tradition this year on the 23rd. Turns out it was a popular idea. The 10 of us waited in the impossibly small area by the door for over 30 minutes before we were seated in a booth for six. We crowded in with 6 kids and 4 adults and enjoyed conversation and chaos. They were brave and tolerant friends and I cherish the memory and the shin bruises from all the kicks under the table. At the Christmas Eve service the next night, it was kids on laps and crawling on the floor or over  our crowded pew. It all ended with Oaks the 2 year old holding a lit candle in awe. Wouldn’t trade a squish…it was full of Spirit.IMG_0032
  • New Niece! Getting to hold June at the Crossfit workout Christmas Eve morning and then kiss her in her fancy dress at church was a special way to celebrate the day.
  • Family Tables We celebrated with a great feast and a sweet family on Christmas Day at Gayle and Steve’s. With Quinton and Erica in town, we were 11 for 13 in Osborne attendance which is a great turnout, but not complete…we can’t wait for Adam and MK to come next week! Good food, great people. Time around the dinner table that kept us there for over an hour and kept us fed for the next six! Our own table was our Advent tableau and also held Christmas morning breakfast sandwhichs and the day after Christmas shape pancakes!
  • IMG_0037Christmas Creations. On his own volition, Eli made Christmas shapes out of Legos. Andi drew an abstract snowman on a scrap piece of paper that I can’t stop enjoying and Oaks made joy with peals of giggles, joy in playing with the new Little People nativity, and just because he says things like, “Ahhh, soo cute!” when he sees light displays.
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So now, Christmas ends but the incarnation remains a life altering reality. ..
John Chrysostom writes,
“for where God wills, the order of nature yields. For he willed, he had the power, he descended, he redeemed; all things move in obedience to God. This day, he who is, is born; and he who is, becomes what he was not….The only begotten One, who is before all ages, who cannot be touched or be percived, who is simple, without body, has now put on my body, which is visible and liable to corruption. for what reason? That coming amongst us he may teach us, an teaching, lead us by the hand to the things that we mortals cannot see. Why is this? Because God is now on earth, and man in heaven; on every side all things commingle. He has come on earth, while being fully in heaven; and while complete in heaven, he is without diminution on earth. Though being the unchanging Word, he became flesh that he might dwell among us.”
Thanks be to God for being here. Amen!

Questions…Good Ones

To have a good conversation, it matters what questions you ask.

Christmas is one week away.

Hopefully, you’ll be gathering with great people around good food and special traditions over the next 7-10 days to celebrate. Also hopefully, you will find a cozy corner and sit down with…, head out on an early morning walk with…, cuddle with a kiddo home from school…, pour a drink and join a few, or sit around a table with many. Opportunities for Christmas conversations are everywhere.

A few comments about questions:* 

  • Do not tell what you could ask. Emphasize a listening over talking and telling this season
  • Avoid “teaching” moments in social discussion by not asking what you already know
  •  The best conversation questions are oriented towards discovery, require thinking and a sharing of what’s inside, instead of information regurgitation skimmed simply off the top.
  • Questions that allow the other people to share what only they can know, allows the one answering the question to share something that will grow a relationship, unveil what’s underneath. We should mostly ask questions of others we cannot know the answer to already.
  • Prompts or invitations help. “Tell me more about…” is a versatile conversation extender and places the opportunity to share back on the one whom you’ve sought in conversation.

One area of my own life where good questions are key right now is in after school conversations with Eli and Andi. I want to draw out of them notes about their almost 8 hour day away, without burdening them.

Drew sent me a link to a Huffington Post article with a list of 25 Ways to Ask Your Kid How School Was Today, without Asking, “How was school today?”

I bookmarked the list in my browser and tried to glance at it just before I’d shut my computer down in the minutes before Eli and Andi were getting off the bus.

The list was helpful and the kids noticed right away that the question was different, a little more intriguing to answer.

Here is a list of some questions that have led us to fun and connectings after school conversations. Some are from the article, others I’ve developed as I’m attempting to change my  default.

  •  Tell me about something that made you laugh today.
  •  Tell me about something that surprised you today. 
  •  What did you do with a friend today?
  •  When did you feel successful today?
  •  Who did you help today?
  •  When did you feel sad today?
  •  Tell me a friend you had fun with during the day?
  •  What was the highlight of your day?
  •  What was hard about today?
  •  Who’s someone you wish you could send to the moon for a day?
  •  What did you hear your teacher say a lot about today
  •  If you were the teacher, what would you have taught today?

I knew it was really helping when Eli came home one day and said, “Mom, I bet you want to know what surprised me today!” The invitation for them to share a story, lay down a frustration, show themselves as the expert on their experience, and let me in on what it’s like out there, is a five minute highlight of my day. Asking better questions of my kids has deepened our relationship and given me great new information. I have experienced the same fruits with some adults lately as well.

I hope Christmas conversations will change me this year.

What do you want to ask about this week? 

 

 

 

*For conversation and discussion purposes only. These guides do not apply to didactic exercises.

Ingredients for Advent

I love the shape of this season. I love creating Christmas around our house (new house this year- yay!), in my shopping lists, on my music players, with my kids, and most important but least urgent- in my heart.

To put Advent- the part of the Christian year that coincides with the American reality of Christmas, into my life, there are certain ingredients required. IMG_3894

To Make Advent: 

2-10 people        Gather a community of friends, family, or anyone who might drop in for dinner

5 candles            One for each week and one for Christmas Day.

1 Dark Room     This is key. Turn off the lights. Light the candle. Read, talk, and pray with the darkness impinging on the  candle’s light as it gathers strength week by week.

1 reading             A book or guide with scripture. This year we are using Seeking the Christmas Lamb- available here on Kindle   which is great for adults or families with kids.

1 interaction      A question to discuss, a sticker to apply, an ornament to hang, a bead to twist, or a way to play in the reading. Essential for kids                                   AND adults

1 prayer                Letting God know we’re open to hearing, listening, waiting, and being still

Extra ingredients:

  • Chaos-   because doing Advent around a family meal, with another Christmas event later that evening, with tired kids, crying newborns, or busy parents, make for anything but peace. Peace coming into chaos is the way God works so the more chaos you endure the closer you are to the heart of the story anyways.
  • New readers– This year the Bible gets passed around to one more person- Andi can read as well as Eli! This means extra patience, holding a burning candle close to your small child, and discipline to not interrupt or over-correct. Again- this is getting us closer and closer to a more Christ-like Christmas- extra patience, space for small children to lead us, and a restraint on our desire to control.
  • Extra awareness- A daily family advent practice is one part of shaping my soul around Christmas. I also desire to read, pray, and sit in God’s presence intentionally in my own spaces of solitude. With the intelligent, creative and spiritual emphasis on celebrating Advent at my church, and some Advent resources I turn to year after year, (Watch for the Light: Readings for Advent and Christmas; Orbis Publishing, and Living the Christian Year: Time to Inhabit the Story of God, by Bobby Gross) I attempt to balance the commerce, the Christmas parties, and the chatter of children with the Christ that came to change it all.

Here is one Advent quote from Nouwen on waiting with hope (not control) and a prayer I wrote to go along with it.

Much of our waiting is filled with wishes… ‘I wish I would have……[I wish this would end]…’. We are full of wishes and our waiting gets entangled in those wishes. For this reason, a lot of our waiting is not open-ended. Our waiting is a way of controlling the future…we want to do the things that will make the desired events take place. Here we can see how wishes tend to be connected with fears.

                But Zechariah, Elizabeth, and Mary were not filled with wishes. They were filled with hope. Hope is something very different. Hope is trusting that something will be fulfilled, but fulfilled according to the promises and not just according to our wishes. Therefore, hope is always open-ended. ..Just imagine what Mary was actually saying in those words, ‘I am the handmaid of the Lord…let what you have said be done to me’ (Luke 1:38). She was saying, ‘I don’t know what this all means, but I trust that good things will happen. She trusted so deeply that her waiting was open to all possibilities. ”[1]

 And so we pray:

with trepidation, with human wishes, with hope, with fear, because we have a hard time waiting,because we long for things to happen, because we want to glorify you, because we want others to see you. 

God, we pray because we know you hear us and we know you have come to us.

Jesus, thank you for coming to us and changing our lives.

Holy Spirit, help us to wait with hope for what God intends to bring to us and to bring us into this season and the next year.

We hope we see you more clearly and live with more light.  Amen.



[1] Henri Nouwen, “Waiting for God” in Watch for the Light: Readings for Advent and Christmas, (Farmington, PA: Plough Publishing House, 2001). 

 

Privilege and Thanksgiving

We’ve taken our Royals family to the Rockies for Thanksgiving. Here in Colorado, we are enjoying bright sunshine, precious moments with grandparents (my kids with theirs and me with mine) and preparing for a day of cooking, eating, playing, relaxing, and then eating some more.

As I’ve thought about how to mark the moment tomorrow, I’m thinking of the articles I read about Ferguson yesterday. Ben Irwin wrote “Stop Praying for Peace in Ferguson” in which he dismisses prayers for peace if they are actually calling for a “return to the status quo, a resumption of normalcy- that is privilege for us and discrimination for them.” And goes on to say, “Stop praying for peace if what you want is for your privilege to remain untouched. When the privileged pray for peace- if it is not accompanied by a commitment to justice, a willingness to lay down our privilege…it’s like trying to have the benefits of resurrection without the crucifixion. Peace without justice. Reconciliation without owning up to the sin of oppression. Harmony without relinquishing any of our privilege.

Eli had “privilege” as a spelling word a few weeks ago. When we quizzed educated adults on how to spell it, almost everyone got it wrong on the first try- adding a “d”, using an “e” instead of the second “i”. Hard as it is to spell the word, actually using our privilege is wrought with struggle.

Jesus taught about privilege in Luke chapter 12. He writes about knowing and doing, responsibility and responsiveness. Luke 12:48 says, “When someone has been given much, much will be required in return; and when someone has been entrusted with much, even more will be required.”

I love a list of blessings, a reflection in gratitude, and a scripture litany of thanksgiving verses. Around the Thanksgiving table,  I love singing, “Albuquerque, he’s my turkey” and saying what we are thankful for in different seasons, because of the year behind us, or even a personal thanks to the person on my right. I believe articulating thanks, cultivating gratitude, and digging deep for a something to be grateful for when all in front of me seems hard.

Over the last few days, I cannot help but think our thanks giving should push us into some thanks doing.

If we acknowledge with gratitude the “much” we have, we should act with conviction towards the expectations upon us.

Around our table tomorrow, or maybe over afternoon pie when we’re not so excited and hungry, the invitation I’ll extend (as Minister of the Gospel/Family Ritual Leader/Bossy Linds?!) is for us to say,

“I’m thankful for the gift I’ve been given… And so I will GO and DO…”

With our great privilege, comes responsibility and doing the right thing.

For all we have to be thankful for, how can our lives look different?

2 Corinthians 9 in the J.B. Phillips translation talks about blessings from God, abundant and often, coming so that we don’t only have what we need, but also what the world needs.

Verse 9 says, “After all, God can give you everything that you need, so that you may always have sufficient both for yourselves and for giving away to other people.” The translation around verse 10 or 11 is, “The more you are enriched by God, the more scope there will be for generous giving, and your gifts…Moreover, your very giving proves the reality of your faith, and that means that that you practise the Gospel that you profess to believe in. ” Finally, verse 15 ends the chapter with the exhortation to “Thank God, then, for God’s indescribable generosity to you!”

With gratitude for God’s indescribable generosity, how then do I act with intentionality?

I’m thankful you read. Have a wonderful Thanksgiving!

 

 

 

Why I (little ole not-in-competitive-shape-me) did another Crossfit Competition

1377166_544628175605078_1290412836_n (1)Just over three years ago, I haphazardly and unabashedly signed up for the KCPD Crossfit Throwdown competition. There were athletes from all over the metro in attendance and competitions offered for individuals, partners and teams.While I stood by the registration table, I was immediately humbled to see a pregnant woman doing burpees and carrying what looked to be 100’s of pounds of plates down the track.
When I heard my own event was to include pull-ups, and that they didn’t offer any bands for assistance, I was beyond apprehensive- the task seemed impossible! Alas, I was offered a ring-row scale. I remember watching the RXd women rip off pull-ups with admiration and disbelief- girls doing pull-ups?!! My Crossfit coach friend behind me said, “Give it a few months. You’ll do pull-ups on your own.” I didn’t believe him that day but worked hard at the gym and, sure enough, got my first unassisted pull-up a few months later.
Memories of that first competition have stayed with me. I was in no shape to compete but was ready to see what my new found fitness could do for me if it was challenged. Three years later, the Throwdown competition has changed, Crossfit has grown and expanded its influence around the world, and I can do 100 unassisted pull-ups.
When I heard our gym was hosting the Throwdown this year, I was interested in competing to do something so great on my home turf, to give myself a goal to work towards, and to test just how far I’d come in three years. I chose to compete in the RX (most difficult) division despite being just on the edge of the required weights and movements in some cases (read: MULTIPLE REPETITIONS of a 95lb snatch, TOES to BAR and CHEST-TO-BAR pull ups). I knew I wouldn’t be competitive in my division because I don’t train to compete. I train to get a good work out, stay in shape, and see my friends. I am satisfied with the fitness I’ve achieved personally while maintaining other goals and obligations in my life. I’m not skilled or strong enough to win. Instead of winning, I signed up to test my current level of fitness, and to work harder than usual in the gym because I had a goal.
The day of the competition was sunny, cool, and crowded. The buzz around the gym was 1 part nerves/excitement/focus in athletes, and 1 part encouragement/support/cheers from fans. Well organized and with a timely flow, the competition moved smoothly through four events. Prescription: heavy. I entered the event apprehensive because I hadn’t felt good for the two weeks prior to the event (unhealth due to: 1 part sinus and cold, 1 part Royals and World Series parties increasing eats and drinks and decreasing sleep). The nerves increased when I heard there were only 15 competitors at my level.
A couple parts of the day stand out. The first event was extremely tough for me. I did not warm up properly, my muscles felt very cold, and I was extremely nervous. I was in tears by the end of WOD 1. By th

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e final work out, I had calmed down, reminded myself of my own goals, and took seriously my warm up routine. I worked my way through my 4th WOD (400m run, 30 Double Unders, 20 Toes to Bar, and 10 presses at 95lb) , finishing 7th out of the 15 women (my highest place of the day by far!) and succeeded in performing all three rounds of double- unders without a miss. I could hear the voices of my friends and family cheering me on through the dreaded and difficult toes to bar, and even appreciated the encouragement of my judge when caught standing over my bar. To hear people cheering me on, to feel my body pushed past limits, and to celebrate a goal within a goal (no missed double unders!), comprises a list of reasons I continue to pursue fitness through Crossfit training.
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I was very impressed with the strength and coordination, the complete athleticism, of the top women that day, and tipped my sweaty headband to them as winners.
For me, I had set out to do something hard and heavy, something beyond my normal workout. Competitions are great for that- for offering a litmus test of what your body can do and for how your efforts and skills stack up against others. The atmosphere of competition pushes you towards greater success- adrenaline and a cheering crowd go a long way in hurrying you up towards another rep or increasing your belief that you can do what appears impossible like that barbell right in front of you. To anyone considering a competition, I’d say, “Go for it!”. Sign up and commit. Train harder and more focused than usual, and then get after it, all the while telling yourself, “I can do this. I can do hard and heavy things!” Enjoy the cheers and the satisfied soreness afterwards.

A Limit on Gratitude?

Try as I may, I cannot get alliteration into my title this week. Know that hurts me.

Background information:

  • Thanksgiving is 17 days away.
  • I have a blessed life. No “real” problems- I don’t have Ebola or sick kids, or suffer from injustice. And yet…
  • I am an external processor and in certain circumstances, I’m prone to complaining
  • Today I’m trying to make some changes.

I’d like to blame the World Series, or being sick, or Halloween , or being a new aunt, for the recent uptake in my sugar consumption. White flour, alcohol, candy and plain ole desserts, have found their way into my mouth far too often over the past month and its my own fault. There are 7 pounds, a nagging case of congestion, and poor workout results that testify to an October of fun and sugar that’s taken a toll!

Alas, as I set out to eat differently, there are strict-ish limits.

Over the past 3 years, I’ve come to appreciate limits as a gift- a boundary line that provides focus in a calendar, work schedule, relationship etc…  that often feels nebulously unbounded. Saying no to some foods for the next few weeks is limiting yes, but freeing as well. I can make easier decisions in the moment knowing I have a goal for the long haul.

Eating restrictions often challenge me or others because of the “CANNOT EAT” list. A change in perspective to, “All that I CAN eat” helps curb discouragement and keeps me from failing.

Such a perspective practice is helpful in all of human [at least American] experience; not just food. To be thankful for what we do have, instead of anxious, disappointed, or angry about what we don’t have, changes us.

In adversity, can I still be grateful?  We are heading into a possible 21 days of freezing temperatures! 

To have a holiday around gratitude is a great idea. Yes, it is commercialized, out of historical context, filled with football, and overshadowed by Christmas. Still, I’m thankful we have it. No, we should not limit the practice of giving thanks to a season or a day, but I’m not going to bemoan having the holiday.

Instead, I’d like to take the limited number of days we have between now and Thanksgiving to practice gratitude more pointedly. Some ideas of how I might practice an attitude of gratitude:

-I will pull myself out of complaining with a list of three things I’m thankful. For example, I might be tempted to complain about changing a diaper at the park..instead, I can be thankful I don’t have to use the nasty park bathroom with my two year old, that I have a kiddo with a healthy digestive system, and that my child isn’t all grown up quite yet and that he wears a diaper means he also cuddles, smiles, plays, and talks like a really fun 2 year old.

-I will write thank you notes for people who have worked with me in Young Life stuff in the last few weeks with specific examples of why what they did served us so well.

-We will keep a list on our chalkboard of why we are thankful as a family.

-I will say thank you out loud and in my head as I move through my day.

-And my family knows, I will craft a Thanksgiving ritual for our thanksgiving table time in Colorado!

I don’t want to limit my gratitude, but I want to take advantage of the limit of a Thanksgiving season to be specific and actionable in giving thanks. Want to come?!

A week without watch parties

There was evening and there was mourning at the end of last week.

The run that was the Royal’s playoff dream, the revitalization of a city, and the bringing together of family, friends, fun, and great food, ended with a pop up ball that Pablo Sandoval had the gall to catch. That Panda, he carries the full weight of Eli’s ire- “I am so mad at Pablo…I can’t believe he had to catch that ball!” Andi’s more bummed about Bumgarner.

With Eli and Andi out of school for conferences Thursday, it was an easy decision to attend the season-celebration rally at Kauffman stadium. Laura and June were up for attending and we donned blue for one more day. Hustling into the stadium, we were welcomed warmly by ushers saying, “Come on in. We’re glad you’re here! Come on in kiddos” and the balloon arches leftover from the previous night’s celebratory preparations. We stood on the lower level in packed stands with other blue-clad, and a bit blue-hearted, faithful Royal’s fans.

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The theme of the rally was gratitude. The city thanked the team, the team thanked the fans, the fans thanked the players. The loyal Royal fan base was back at the K, on their feet, with signs, cheers, and a few tears. Ten or so players showed up in street clothes and took pictures of the crowd on their phones. They received their Sly James gift of a bow tie and spoke with resilient pride and obvious emotion.

Laura remarked later that the rally was like a funeral. She’s spot on. It was a bunch of people gathered to remember, talk about, and celebrate what was great and alive and true, but is now lost, gone, and over.

We left feeling glad we came but really, really sad. Playing with the kids outside at a park helped, but the afternoon was terrible- I was dragging with a moping gloom! It didn’t help that I was carrying a sinus infection and cough sickness in addition to my broken blue heart.

Eli asked if I wanted to play catch at 4pm. We threw it around in the backyard which was really, really fun. A rooting into how we have changed (for one thing,Eli cares about playing baseball now), and that there’s so much to be grateful for and move on towards. Really, its a bummer they lost, but it’s a gift they got there at all.

Drew and I are still trying to compose a bit of a family diary of the whole month. We loved so much of what we saw, heard, cheered, talked about, crafted with paper (#paperroayls), and shared with friends and family.

While we compose ourselves and our memoir, might I suggest you read this one that is already published and excellent by Rany on the Royals writer,  RANY JAZAYERL.

It’s a well-written story with highlights, memories and good points. If you don’t read all of it, here’s a tidbit I found especially helpful in my healing.

What hurts so much isn’t that something was taken away from us, but knowing that something amazing and life-altering was very nearly given to us. A title is rare enough; to win a title like this — with a generation of irrelevance melted away in an instant — wouldn’t have  been a once-in-a-lifetime experience. It would have been something most fans will never experience. We were 90 feet away from the kind of triumph you might see once or twice a decade in all of sports. We were so close to it that we were planning for it — by necessity. The city had the parade route mapped out for today. There was champagne on ice in the clubhouse. Everything was perfect.

Everything but the ending. And that will live with us for a long time.

But if the ending will live with us, so will everything that made it possible. The Royals didn’t just bring us joy for a month or give us memories to last a lifetime; they gave us a sense of mattering again. The Royals are relevant. They are the champions of the American League. Yost will manage the All-Star Game next season. We didn’t #TakeTheCrown, but we still own the pennant — a pennant the Yankees and Red Sox and Tigers can never take from us. More than one Cubs fan has already told me he’d trade a testicle for the chance to lose a World Series by one run.

The Royals have returned to the land of the living. Sports are pain, but pain is something only the living can feel. For far too long, the Royals weren’t good enough to trigger any nerve endings. You stand up after your foot’s been asleep for 29 years, and the pins and needles are going to drive you crazy for a while. But it’s better than being numb.

Here’s to a week of watching for other ways we can wake up, come together, and be relevant in making good in the world.

 

 

 

 

Fiction or Non

A smattering of reads

A smattering of reads

Around this Osborne house, everyone is reading something.

Drew is wrapped up in Royal’s tweets, blogs, articles, statistics, opinions and advice.

Oakley is into picking out his own books and likes Runaway Bunny, How do Dinosaurs…., Brown Bear, Brown Bearthe “Tractor Book”, Goodnight Moon, and the Curious George book from the library that was supposed to be for Andi.

Eli is reading about baseball from long ago (ie: Shoeless Joe Jackson) and Googling how to throw different pitches. You’ll find Eli in one of two places these days: in the chair next to the window with a book, or in the backyard with a baseball and a glove- by himself or with whoever will play.

Andi was awarded a certificate for surpassing her reading goal for the first quarter at school She has stacks of books scattered in her wake- beside the couch where she “watches” [mostly Andi reads through] Royals games, or next to her bed for “rest time”. She is on a reading romp.

I’m coming off a summer reading binge where I loved following suggestions and borrowing books that filled hours of my time…escape? Maybe. Enjoyment? Yes! I read many books now movies and am trying to see what I read. Since July, some of what I’ve read includes: Where’d Ya Go Bernadette, The Spellman Files, This is Where I Leave You, Half of The Shadow of the Wind, About a Boy, Cryptid Hunters and Zach’s Lie  by Roland Smith, in efforts to see if Eli was ready to read them, and lastly, The Book Thief. 

On Andi’s midterm report, her teacher said she has a better grasp of fiction than non-fiction and she should be encouraged to read more non-fiction at home.

Fiction or non-fiction? What shapes our minds more aptly? What does Andi need from a non-fiction book to enhance her comprehension beyond what a fiction book can provide?

I firmly believe, just because something didn’t actually happen, doesn’t mean it isn’t true. Stories can tell the truth.

Jesus was one of the best story tellers- using parables to teach instead of straight dictation of religious facts. A parable is a short story used to illustrate a moral truth. Jesus thought story could shape spirit and direct behavior. Painting pictures with words, using characters and conflict and offering a conclusion, can make a brain path to a new reality for a real life situation.

The Royals are consuming much of our mental, emotional, and pphysicallife (yes, this post season is affecting what we eat and drink, whether or not we are up early to work out, and if we get enough sleep!) and they are directing our reading! The Royals are also writing a story- a non-fiction one with narrative invitations towards drama, hope, believing, and rallying. The non-fiction part of this real life KC adventure has the spirit of a fiction story someone should write.

We will share with Andi the non-fiction facts of nature, history, science or sports when it’s happening around her and upon assignments from school.  I think the best non-fiction reading happens when we need it- like me now. I’m taking a fiction break and reading about spiritual and emotional health for me, and a book on parenting strong spirited kids.

Fiction will not fault us. Non-fiction works when we yearn for the facts and why’s behind the what’s we see and experience.

I have to think that Andi and the Royals will be okay and that both are shaped by stories of fantasy with some fact and history all woven together.

 

A Prayer for an Ethical Child

I wrote this prayer for my ethics class in seminary. With stories I’ve heard in the past two days, and the children’s lives I lead in my own house, I offer it as a reminder to myself and a possible resource for others. While we won’t ever be perfect as parents, we can always pray.

 

An Ethics Prayer for Kids

Child, Sweet child,

I love you, its true.

May your life be filled with love each day,

Some you keep, and lots you give away.

With Jesus in your heart,

there’s love in every part

With care in your hands,

Help others, heal lands.

With Holy Spirit in your head,

think wisely, carefully led

With movement in your feet,

  Share good news with all you meet

With strong and helpful arms,

   Carry burdens, stop the harms.

With your mouth, say what’s true,

Accept those who are different than you.

Child, Sweet child,

I love you, its true.

May your life be filled with love each day

Some you keep and lots you give away.